In an effort to pull together additional resources,
we are listing here a variety of organizations and publications by and about Sepharadim.
We can't totally vouch for the accuracy of all this information,
since much of it comes to us second- or third-hand.

The old Monastirli synagogue was at 173-175 Eldridge Street, between Delancey and Rivington Sts. on the Lower East Side.
It was in the inter-building courtyard, and was reached by walking through the tenement building's ground floor hallway to the back.
The building housed a Kehila, with an outside iron stair to the Women's Gallery (there was also an inside stair), and an upper floor that housed the Talmud Torah—called Ohr Torah—until around 1950, when there were too few students to keep it going.

As the Monastirlis from the Lower East Side and those from the New Lots area of Brooklyn moved "up and out," they established a new facility in Cedarhurst (see below). After a time, they could no longer maintain the Eldridge Street synagogue. It was sold. The site was later cleared and no trace of it remains

Since the closing of the Kehila on Eldridge Street, the few remaining Monastirlis in the Lower East Side neighborhood have joined forces with the "Yanniotes"--the Romaniote rite Kehila Kedosha Janina on Broome Street.

This large congregation of Sephardim, has many members descended from the original immigrants to the area from Monastir.
They publish a monthly newsletter about the members, and also include a number of recipes.
Contact them at the address listed here.

Monastirlis were among the principal founders and supporters of this institution. It was familiarly known for many years simply as "The Home" or "The Old Age Home."

Once supported entirely by contributions from the Sefaradim of New York City, it is now a public institution, though Sefaradim in general and Monastirlis in particular remain among its most ardent philanthropic supporters.